Non-Farm Payrolls Did Not Delight, So It’s Back To Home On The Range?

 | Sep 13, 2015 02:31AM ET

Non-Farm Payroll data was a “Ho Hum”. The G20 meeting was almost a non-event. The IMF reiterated the obvious by claiming that the slowdown in China will have global economic impacts, and, in response to these brilliant observations, financial markets have now snapped back into very tight ranging behaviors. The clean up crew is busy picking up the garbage from various market machinations, and stunned pundits are searching for consensus on where markets will head over the next few weeks. In other words, we are right back at Square One, staring at uncertainty on many levels.

September is always the month many of the world’s analysts and investors in general return from vacation, dust off their desks, and review their current outlook for the near-term future. Studies have demonstrated that there is a high probability for a market reversal following long holiday periods, although the change in direction may not happen immediately. Doomsayers have cried “Wolf” for so long a period of time that no one is taking heed of their warnings anymore. Respected market commentators, however, are beginning to show concern and point to compelling charts to support their cases.

September is also the month when we discover if the Fed will blink or follow through on raising its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points. Recalibration of interest rates, the latest buzzword associated with the process, has been a long time coming. The drivers, according to countless pronouncements by the Fed, have been the employment picture in the U.S. market and the overall health and resilience of the global economy.

h2 Where are we on the U.S. employment front?/h2